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Global stock markets were gripped by extreme fear and panic on the morning
of January 21st, with Asian markets under relentless selling pressure, then
ricocheting to Europe and Latin America. Japan's Nikkei-225 melted down 18%
and six trillion yuan ($830 billion) of market value on the Shanghai and Shenzhen
stock exchanges was wiped out in the first three weeks of January, the worst
correction in a decade.
Stunning losses in Asia spread to European bourses. Germany's DAX tumbled
7.2%, the French CAC-40 plunged 6.8% and Britain's Footsie-100 lost 5.5%, their
biggest one-day slides since the Sept 2001 terror attacks, wiping out more
than $350 billion of market value. The Dow Jones Industrial (DJI) futures market
plunged 550-points in electronic trading, extending a vicious slide to the
brink of a bear market, and conjuring up memories of "Black Monday", the crash
of 1987.
Recessions in the US economy usually arrive about once every six years. Since
the last recession ended in 2002, a downturn in the world's largest economy
is probably due in 2008. Until now, the big threat to US household spending
was focused on the slumping housing market, but history suggests consumers
can withstand one serious blow to their wealth. But a double-barreled assault
can be disastrous, so if the stock market keeps sliding, it would probably
tip the economy into recession.

The US Treasury's "Plunge Protection Team" (PPT) operates in all three major
trading zones - Asia, Europe, and America, always trying to jig the stock market
higher, and working behind the scenes to prevent the emergence of a bear market.
The key weapons in the PPT's arsenal include brainwashing thru the media, fudging
the US inflation data, Fed rate cuts, massive Fed money injections, tax rebates,
pork barrel spending, and intervention in the stock index futures markets.
Typically, the stock market trades with a six-month time horizon. But unrelenting
intervention in the futures markets engineered by the PPT, coupled with big
Fed money injections, and the endless flow of cheap capital from Tokyo, via
the "yen carry" trade, enabled the Dow Jones Industrials (DJI) to float near
record highs last quarter, even though the US economy was already slipping
into recession.
When the DJI-30 tumbled towards its August lows on Jan 10th, Fed chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke
wasted no time in telegraphing a hefty rate cut, trying to "jawbone" the stock
market higher and prevent a slide below key chart support. "In light of recent
changes in the outlook for and the risks to growth, we stand ready to take
substantive additional action as needed to support growth and to provide adequate
insurance against downside risks," Bernanke declared.

However, with US stock markets off to their worst start in history this year,
the illusion that PPT intervention can endlessly provide a "safety net" under
the market has evaporated. After the Dow Jones Industrials plunged 550-points
in electronic trading on January 21st, the rookies at the Fed panicked, and
sliced 75-basis points off the fed funds rate to 3.50%, the largest single
rate cut in 23-years.
The Fed's emergency rate cut to 3.50%, bolstered suspicions that Bernanke
is following the blueprints of former Fed chief "Easy" Al Greenspan, pursuing
a radical policy of "Asset Targeting", or adjusting interest rates in the same
direction of home prices and the stock market. But so far, the Fed's 175 basis
points of monetary morphine, (the "Bernanke Put") haven't eased the pain in
the stock market. Instead, they have been as effective as "pushing on a piece
of string".
Greenspan Lays out Blueprint for "Asset Targeting
In his last speech before the world's central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming
on August 28, 2005, "Easy" Al Greenspan said dealing with the end of the US
housing boom would be the most immediate challenge for his successor. "The
housing boom will inevitably simmer down. As part of that process, house turnover
will decline from currently historic levels, while home-price increases will
slow and prices could even decrease. Consumer spending will weaken as homeowners
slow the pace at which they use home-equity loans to finance expenditure," Greenspan
predicted.
Thus, "Fed policy will be increasingly driven by the configuration of asset
prices, which are already an integral part of our evaluation of the large array
of forces that influence financial stability and economic growth. But given
our current state of knowledge, I find it difficult to envision central banks
successfully targeting asset-price changes, such as rises or declines in prices
of stocks and houses," he said.

The Fed focuses on so-called wealth effects, or how changes in stock and housing
markets may impact business and consumer spending. On Jan 11, 2006 New York
Fed chief Timothy Geithner laid out the central bank's strategy. "Once asset
prices have changed, the Fed should respond. When policy makers have already
witnessed a significant move in asset values, and are confident in what that
move means for output and inflation, it should be prepared to adjust policy
accordingly," he said.
"The behavior of asset prices will play an important role in the formulation
of monetary policy going forward, perhaps more important than in the past," Geithner
said. Robert Shiller, a Yale University economist, and co-founder of the CME's
house-price index, predicted on Dec 31st, a possibility that the US economy
would stumble into a Japanese-style recession, with house prices declining
for years.
"American real estate values have already lost around $1 trillion. That could
easily increase threefold over the next few years. This is a much bigger issue
than sub-prime. We are talking trillions of dollars' worth of losses," he predicted.
Chicago futures markets are pricing in further declines in US home prices,
of up to 16 percent. In the third quarter of 2007, US homeowners withdrew $20
billion less in equity from their homes than in the prior quarter, and since
housing prices have continued to tumble, and the outlook for cash-outs has
continued to dim.
Déjà vu, Bernanke Exercises the "Greenspan Put"
"Easy" Al Greenspan had one formula for rescue operations during times of
financial distress. From the stock market crash of 1987, to the S&L crisis
of the early 1990's, to the Asian crisis and the collapse of LTCM, to the feared
Y2k crisis, to the bursting of the tech stock bubble, Greenspan responded with
massive doses of monetary morphine to bailout over-zealous speculators in the
stock market.

However, the exercise of the "Greenspan Put" ultimately failed to turn the
bearish tide in the S&P 500 Index in 2001-02, which lost half of its value
from its peak in March 2000. Markets do not travel in straight lines, and the
2-year bear market was interrupted by several bargain hunting rallies, linked
to Fed rate cuts, but the rallies eventually fizzled out before the market
plunged to new lows.
But the outgrowth of the "Greenspan Put" was to stimulate bubbles in other
markets, such as the housing bubble of 2001-05, engineered by suppressing interest
rates at 1%, and providing the liquidity needed to create the housing and debt
bubbles, and also by reducing investors' fear of losses after the bubble bursts,
by creating the expectations that the Fed will always bail them out
The Fed's rate cut to 1% ignited the beginning of another bubble in US home
prices in 2001, which eventually climbed by 54% to an average $219,000 in June
2005. Greenspan fueled higher home prices to pull the US economy out of a mild
recession, a tactic developed by the Bank of England. Greenspan also ignited
the "Commodity Super Cycle," which Bernanke then guided to all-time highs this
month.
The housing market became the main driver of the US economy, accounting for
half of overall growth and payroll jobs created from 2001 until 2005. Home
price appreciation added $5.2 trillion to Americans' balance sheets during
the bubble years, or 68% of all wealth creation. However, now that US home
prices are projected to fall by double-digits in 2008, the Fed is exercising
the "Bernanke Put."

Greenspan was able to pursue his high-octane policy of slashing interest rates
to 1% to rescue the stock market, because global inflationary pressures were
largely subdued. The gold market was dead in the water, languishing under $300
/oz. The Bank of England was dumping half of its gold reserves at an average
price of $276 /oz, and central banks from Switzerland, Argentina, and Australia
were selling their gold reserves and buying foreign government bonds.

Six years ago, crude oil prices had sunk to as low as $18 /barrel, on fears
the stock market crash in Sept 2001 would usher in a major slowdown in the
global economy. But conditions in the crude oil market have changed dramatically
from six years ago, hitting $100 /barrel earlier this month. China is now importing
half its crude oil consumption, and should log a 12% increase, or 400,000 bpd,
in imports for 2008.
Today, gold is trading at $925 /oz, and US consumer prices were 4.1% higher
last year, the largest annual rise since 1990, and producer prices were 6.3%
higher, just below a 34-year high. The Fed has gone insane, slashing interest
rates at a time when inflationary pressures are dangerously high, playing Russian
roulette with the greenback, and guiding the US economy into the "Stagflation" trap.
On Oct 2, 2007, "Easy" Al Greenspan, the godfather of the $1.8 trillion sub-prime
debt bubble, warned, "We're beginning to see the extraordinary period of disinflation
and economic growth coming to a halt. We now have to be very sensitive to the
fact that inflationary pressures could well get out of hand," he said. But
in trying to clean up the mess that Greenspan left behind, the Fed is exercising
the "Bernanke Put."

On Jan 15th, Saudi oil chief Ali al-Naimi said the Fed's cheap dollar policy
is adding $20-$30 to the price of oil. "$20-30 is the outside influence on
the price of oil. If you look at who is in the market, you'll find a lot of
financial institutions, players who are speculating, using the market as a
hedge," Naimi said. Soybean prices have tripled from six years ago, largely
due to the bio-diesel connection and weak US dollar.
Gold is a reliable harbinger of inflation and is setting all-time highs, as
the Fed pushes interest rates far below the inflation rate. The dollar is hovering
at a record low against the Euro and a basket of foreign currencies. Flooding
the market with more dollars will drive up the price of foreign imports. The
Fed wants to inflate the stock market, but the money injections drive up food
and energy costs.
Last week, Stephen Roach, the head of Morgan Stanley Asia observed, "Policy-makers
are reaching back to the same play book that created this mess in the first
place. They're saying we are there to clean up after bubbles burst, rather
than to prevent them. It's a dangerous, reckless and irresponsible way to run
the world's largest economy. We have a market-friendly Fed injecting a lot
of liquidity in the system which will set us up for another bubble economy.
Excessive monetary accommodation just takes us from bubble to bubble to bubble," he
explained.
ECB Shifts from Policy of "Asset Targeting"
Hopes that the Fed's emergency rate cut to 3.50% would be followed by a easier
European Central Bank policy, were dashed last week, when ECB chief Jean "Tricky" Trichet
said he would not cut Euro zone interest rates in line with the meltdown in
European stock markets. For many years, the ECB had been targeting its repo
rate in line with the direction of European stock markets, while allowing the
Euro to climb higher against the US dollar to help contain the cost of raw
materials.
After the benchmark German DAX Index plunged by roughly 15% last week, in
reaction to meltdowns in Asia and Wall Street, European stock market speculators
were hoping for the instant exercise of the "Trichet Put", to bail them out
of a tough situation. Instead, "Tricky" Trichet signaled a hard-line stance,
in sharp contrast to the rookies at the Bernanke Fed, saying he is focused
on fighting inflation, even in the face of a big stock market meltdown.
"In demanding times of significant market correction and turbulences, it is
the responsibility of the ECB to solidly anchor inflation expectations to avoid
additional volatility in already highly volatile markets. At this stage I think
we have to look at what's happening in the real economy, we have a base scenario
and at this stage I'm not going to modify this base scenario," Trichet said.

"There is one needle in our compass and it is price stability. There is no
contradiction between price stability and financial stability. The market correction,
which the ECB and other central banks had warned over a year go, was now taking
place and it is significant. But under the capital market system it was natural
for risks to emerge and central banks" main job was to solidly anchor inflation
expectations."
"What is extremely important is to offer a steady hand as possible. First,
price stability and then solidly anchor inflation expectations. If risks did
not materialize you would not be living in a market economy, you would be living
in the Soviet Union," Trichet explained on Jan 24th. He was backed up by the
Bundesbank's Juergen Stark on Jan 22nd, "Our main worry is the high inflation
rate of 3.1% in the Euro zone. Volatility on global stock markets is not helpful,
but recent developments are an overreaction and their importance should not
be exaggerated," he said.
On Jan 28th, Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer said what was right for
the US was not necessarily right for Europe. "You can't just go and say, we'll
do the same thing as the Fed. Despite the pressure, we shouldn't cut interest
rates and we ought to get towards an inflation rate of around 2% in the Euro
zone," he said.

We're witnessing the reincarnation of the old "Tricky" Trichet, harkening
back to a speech he gave on April 23, 2002 to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
and the World Bank. Then, Bank of France chief Trichet warned that central
bankers must be cautious in considering volatile asset prices such as the stock
market and housing prices when setting monetary policy.
"My feeling is that we should remain extremely cautious about it, because
it would be like opening Pandora's Box if we started setting our key policy
rates according to asset price changes. Not only could the large swings, misalignments
or even bubbles of assets prices endanger price stability, which is the main
objective of most central banks, but also they could impinge upon financial
stability," he warned.
Bank of England takes Middle of the Road Approach,
The Bank of England is a disciple of "Asset Targeting," and nowadays, British
interest rates are largely moved by the direction of UK home prices. On Nov
23rd, the BoE's Rachel Lomax indicated the central bank faces a tricky balancing
act. "While current stock market woes could hit British property prices, there
are always risks in easing policy at a time of rising energy prices."
"This is all the more so after a year when inflation measures remains uncomfortably
high. On the other hand, we need to be very alert to the risk that the economy
may be slowing too abruptly. At current interest rate levels monetary policy
may be on the restrictive side," Lomax said. Two weeks later, the BOE lowered
its base rate a quarter-point, to 5.50%, the first rate cut in over 2-years
to shore-up the UK housing market in the face of a global credit crunch.

On Jan 23rd, the BOE hinted at another quarter-point rate cut to 5.25% in
February to safeguard home prices, but aggressive cuts of the kind initiated
by the rookies at the Bernanke Fed are not on the cards. BoE chief Mervyn King
said Britain's economy faced its most challenging year in a decade, but suggested
that rapid-fire interest rate cuts were not the answer to financial market
woes.
Most BoE members are worried that rapid-fire rate cuts would send the wrong
message and fuel expectations of higher inflation in the future. Sterling's
recent slide below $2.00 is also exacerbating price pressures. "Movements in
the yield curve and the depreciation of sterling had already provided some
further monetary easing," the 8-1 majority of the committee argued.

Interestingly enough, BoE chief King issued two warnings of an impending global
stock market crash in November and in December, mostly ignored by over zealous
stock market operators, until a panic sell-off hit in January. "The re-pricing
of risk we have talked about for some considerable time hasn't really fed through
to markets such as equity markets, and if there were to be an adjustment of
risk premiums in equity markets, with a fall in asset prices, then that could
have a bigger impact on the world economy," King warned on Nov 14th.
"It's very striking that despite developments we've seen in the last three
months, equity prices are on average higher now than they were in August. This
is true around the world and in emerging markets, they're 20% higher. There
must be some downside risks there," King told reporters at a news conference.
On Dec 18, Mr King warned of more bad news to come for the financial sector, "The
problems in the financial sector remain with us. A painful adjustment faces
the global banking sector over the next few months as losses are revealed and
new capital is raised to repair bank balance sheets. Banks' reluctance to lend
will lead to a sharper slowdown in the United States. That concern is a serious
one because it does hold out the prospect that there will be a self-reinforcing
downturn in credit and activity," King told the UK's parliament's Treasury
Select Committee.

Ironically, BoE rate cuts weakened the British pound against the Japanese
yen, and triggered the unwinding of "yen carry" trades. The BoE's massive injections
of monetary steroids into the UK banking system also destroyed the purchasing
power of the British pound by 35%, when measured in gold terms. It's a signal
that BoE rate cuts will lead to faster money supply growth and higher inflation.
Yet on Jan 28th, the BoE's radical inflationist, David Blanchflower said in
an interview with the Guardian newspaper, that the current level of UK interest
rates at 5.50% was too restrictive. "Worrying about inflation at this time
seems like fiddling when Rome burns. There are risks to the upside to inflation,
but the greater risks are to activity on the downside. Evidence from the housing
market and especially the commercial property market is worrying," he said.
However, BoE hawk Andrew Sentance warned that market expectations of several
more rate cuts were ignoring rising price pressures. BoE chief Mervyn King
pointed to a balanced approach between slowing growth and rising inflation. "Although
central banks can and will respond to the consequences of strains in the banking
system, the solution to the underlying problem does not rest with them, but
with the banks and financial markets themselves," King said on Jan 23rd.
Bursting of Shanghai Red-chip Bubble?
While the Bernanke Fed is slashing interest rates at a frantic pace, and the
ECB holds a steady hand, the Chinese central bank is moving in the opposite
direction, and tightening liquidity in the Shanghai money markets. On Monday,
the mighty Shanghai red-chip index plunged 7.2% to 4,435, its fourth biggest
drop this decade, that left it 28% below its record intra-day high, hit in
October.
China's central bank has poured cold water on the idea that the country's
juggernaut economy can decouple from the United States. "China's exports will
be badly hit if US consumption weakens," said Zhang Tao, of the People's Bank
of China. "If US consumption really comes down, that's bad news for us. That
will have a pretty severe impact on our exports," Zhang warned.

On Jan 4th, China's central bank vowed to further tighten monetary policy
in 2008, aiming to prevent inflation from spreading across the broader economy.
With food accounting for a third of China's consumer price basket, the 18%
surge in Chinese food prices last year is a ticking time bomb, where fuel price
increases touch off violent protests. If the inflation problem gets out of
hand, it could have devastating implications for the economy, and China's political
stability.
The Bernanke Fed's embrace of "Asset Targeting," and its complete disregard
for the inflationary consequences of its actions, has caught the attention
of major players overseas. On Dec 27th, Hu Xiaolian, director of China's Foreign
Exchange warned, "If the US federal funds rate continues to fall, this will
certainly have a harmful effect on the US dollar exchange rate and the international
currency system," Hu wrote.
Bernanke is risking a disastrous replay of the 1970's, when high oil prices
fueled double-digit inflation. Every time the Fed lowered rates to boost job
growth, inflation took off, causing a vicious price spiral. The Fed let the
disease rage for so long that it took a strict monetarist approach by Paul
Volcker in the early 1980's to finally defeat inflation. The price was a deep
recession, with unemployment hitting 11% in 1982.
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